Wednesday, 5 August 2009

Monday, 3 August 2009

So imagine you're sat in your yard, in east London, your family are all tucked up in bed, then bang. Someone kicks your down down. But this person who's telling you to get out of your yard and give it up isn't someone you've got beef with or the police, but a soldier. They're going to give your yard to a family in north London because basically, they don't like you cockneys and they don't care what happens to you. It doesn't matter if you've got a baby in your arms when you argue with them, they'll slap you anyway. Cry at the loss of your home? Get a beating. And when the news crews turn up, they too get told to fall back... hence why you'll never see it on the news. And guess who's helping the new family move in... the police. As for your belongings, they've been dumped a mile or so away at the roadside.

Of course, this isn't happening in London. If this had actually happened here it would be front page news, a trending topic on Twitter, whatever. But it is happening in Palestine.

I recently wrote about my boy Jody for SuperSuper. He may be confined to a wheelchair but that hasn't stopped him dedicating much of his teenage years fighting oppression and social injustice. We recently waved him goodbye as he ventured back to Palestine, where he's been staying with the Hannoun family and writing reports for Ctrl.Alt.Shift on the on-going struggle out there.

Just two weeks ago the family were out buying a cake for Jody's mums birthday. Today they're sat on a gravel track, homeless, with no where to go and no chance of justice.

I don't know the answer, but I do know I need to share the article which came from Jody today:

Week 41 – Eviction

At 5:15am on Sunday morning, I woke up to the sound of the Hannoun family's front room windows being smashed in. I had laid down to rest only 20 minutes earlier. By the time I'd got to my feet, soldiers were rushing into the house and pushing me out the front door. As I fell down the stairs outside, I pointed at my wheelchair:

Just outside the house, the police gathered everyone at the wall. Within a matter of seconds they had confiscated everyone's camera and mobile phone, meaning that no footage could be taken and no media could be called. Not that media would've been able to come anyway – the police had closed off the entire area.

The police promptly proceeded to arrest all the international activists they could find, who had been staying with the families to show their support... it was over in minutes. But when they got to me:

"Where are you from?"

"Mish fairhem (Arabic for "I don't understand").

"Just leave him," instructed the chief police officer. He must've thought I was a member of the family he was throwing onto the streets.

As they forced us across the road, I was the only international left with the family. A police barrier was hastily set up, imprisoning us in the road directly opposite the house. All around me I could see tears falling from eyes, and faces falling into hands.

"For the second time I have been kicked out of my home," sobbed Jana, the 16 year old daughter of the family.

A grandmother of the family was cursing the soldiers for their crimes, when one got offended and attempted to strike her. Her son pulled down the barrier, launching himself at the soldiers until he was brutally beaten and crushed to the ground. Other Palestinians were also injured as they desperately tried to de-arrest him.

It was only a couple of hours before the settlers were moving in to the Hannouns house.

"Why are you here?" they cried, "Why are you taking my home?" A distraught and broken Jana had to be held back from scaling the fence, for fear that she would be the next to be beaten.

The international media and UN observers were completely blocked from entering the area. Al Jazeera and CNN managed to get there by climbing through neighbouring gardens, but even they were manhandled and harassed.

I don't cry often, but when I saw Maher breaking down half way through an interview, the emotion was too much for me to handle.

"We have been made refugees again," he told reporters, "this is a slow genocide they are conducting against the Palestinians of East Jerusalem."

At one point, a van of settlers drove up from behind us. I watched as family members held back Jana from kicking the door, and I watched as soldiers ushered the settlers through to the house they had just stolen. This is Apartheid.

At around 5pm, police finally took down the fence and re-opened the roads outside the house. We all immediately crossed the road, put our banners back up and sat on the steps outside the Hannouns' home. Soldiers forced us across the road once more, erecting a new police fence outside the houses.

In the evening, people from across the country gathered outside the house to protest, and chanted as loud as our voices would allow. The Israeli police responded to the peaceful protest by beating everyone up – punching people in the head and throwing a woman with a baby in her arms to the ground. 'Fascism' would be an understatement as 13 more arrests were made.

We slept the night on the street.

Words: Jody McIntyre. Reporter Jody had to go to a friend's house to write this and is now going back to the family.

Corruption is both a cause of poverty, and a barrier to overcoming it. It is one of the most serious obstacles to eradicating poverty.

Ctrl.Alt.Shift is unmasking corruption with their new competition.

Win the chance to create a unique comic style story in collaboration with acclaimed musician and writer Dev Hynes aka Lightspeed Champion.

After the first round of judging at the end of September, shortlisted entrants will be given Lightspeed Champion's comic script as inspiration and asked to create a visual adaptation of the story.

The winning commission will also be published in a comic and form part of an exhibition around the theme of corruption for Ctrl.Alt.Shift, the experimental initiative politicising a new generation of activists for social justice and global change. This will coincide with annual comics festival Comica which takes place at the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA) this November.

To enter the competition, please send relevant examples of your visual work, along with your contact details, to comiccomp@ctrlaltshift.co.uk by Friday 25th September.

Five shortlisted artists will then be given a comic brief to respond to and a winner chosen by a panel or judges including:

As well as shaping so much of the British music scene we're proud to call our own, Rinse has created many friendships and memories outside of their own station walls, whether that's all the forum massive, the dedicated rave attendees, those that stock up on the CDs... It's changed a lot since my early experiences with Rinse (a time when I had no p to do anything and relied on radio to give me a life) but onwards and upwards. Happy Birthday Rinse...